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Matt Holland
Irish footballer

Matt Holland

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
Irish footballer
A.K.A.
Matthew Holland Matty Holland
Places
Work field
Gender
Male
Place of birth
Bury, United Kingdom
Age
50 years
Stats
Height:
175 cm
Sports Teams
Ipswich Town F.C.
Charlton Athletic F.C.
AFC Bournemouth
West Ham United F.C.
AFC Bournemouth
Republic of Ireland national football team
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Matthew Rhys Holland (born 11 April 1974) is a former professional footballer, who played as a central midfielder. He began his career at West Ham United and subsequently joined Bournemouth, before spending long spells at Ipswich Town and Charlton Athletic, where he retired in 2009.

He represented the Republic of Ireland from 1999 to 2006 at international level, earning 49 caps and scoring 5 goals. He was included in their squad for the 2002 FIFA World Cup.

Since ending his football career he has worked in the media, including with the BBC, Setanta Sports, Talksport, BT Sport and RTÉ.

Club career

Early career

Initially rejected by Arsenal for being 'too small' he went to West Ham United where he moved up the ranks of the academy but did not play for the first team. He joined Football Conference side Farnborough Town during the 1992–93 season and made twenty-one appearances.

Bournemouth

In order to gain first team football, he joined South Coast side Bournemouth in January 1995. He played a total of 104 games, scoring 18 goals whilst at Dean Court, and also became captain.

Ipswich Town

In the summer of 1997, Holland joined Ipswich Town for a fee of £800,000. He again became team captain and captained the club into the Premier League by winning the First Division play-offs in 2000. He captained the club to a fifth-place finish and qualification for the UEFA Cup in their first season in the Premier League in 2001. Though Ipswich were relegated in 2002 he stayed with the club after he turned down a £4 million move to Aston Villa. His spell at Ipswich is remembered for the consistency he showed, after playing 223 consecutive games and only missing one league match (due to international duty) in the six years he was at Portman Road.

Charlton Athletic

After Ipswich failed to win promotion in 2003, Holland moved back to the Premier League by joining Charlton Athletic on a four-year contract for an initial £750,000 fee, which later rose to £900,000. Again with this move he assumed the captain's armband and was ever-present in his first season for the club. One of the longest-serving Charlton players, he claimed more than half the entire vote for the 2007–08 Fans' Player of the Year. His final match came in a 2–2 draw with Cardiff on 21 April 2009, and the club released him after relegation to League One at the end of the season.

In July 2009, Holland trained with Colchester United following his release from Charlton in order to keep himself fit.

International career

Although born in England, Holland qualified to play for the Republic of Ireland through his grandmother who hailed from County Monaghan. He made his international debut on 9 October 1999 in an away Euro 2000 qualifier against Macedonia, playing the last five minutes as a substitute for Mark Kennedy. His first goal came on his fifth cap, the equaliser in a 1–1 draw with Portugal on 7 October 2000 in qualification for the 2002 FIFA World Cup. Holland captained the side in three internationals, the first on his 28th cap, a 2–0 friendly defeat to Scotland.

He went with the Republic of Ireland to the 2002 World Cup scoring the equaliser against Cameroon in their opening game. Ireland were eliminated from this tournament in a Second Round penalty shoot-out against Spain, with Holland among those who missed. Following Ireland's failure to qualify for the 2006 World Cup, he announced his retirement from international football on 5February 2006 having made 49 appearances and scoring five goals. Manager Steve Staunton had attempted to persuade Holland to continue.

Career statistics

Club

ClubSeasonLeagueFA CupLeague CupOtherTotal
DivisionAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
West Ham United1992–93First Division0000000000
1993–94Premier League00000000
1994–95Premier League00000000
Total0000000000
Farnborough Town (loan)1992–93Football Conference210210
AFC Bournemouth (loan)1994–95Second Division161161
AFC Bournemouth1995–96Second Division43102040305210
1996–97Second Division457102000487
Total1041830603011618
Ipswich Town1997–98First Division46104072205912
1998–99First Division465204222549
1999–00First Division46101040305410
2000–01Premier League3832072475
2001–02Premier League383101060463
2002–03First Division457201060547
Total2593812024619231446
Charlton Athletic2003–04Premier League3861020416
2004–05Premier League3233010363
2005–06Premier League2315120302
2006–07Premier League3311020361
2007–08Championship3112010341
2008–09Championship3413010381
Total191131519021514
Career total5756930139622266678

International

Source:
National teamYearAppsGoals
Republic of Ireland199910
200051
200192
2002121
2003100
200461
200560
Total495

International goals

Republic of Ireland score listed first, score column indicates score after each Holland goal.
No.DateVenueCapOpponentScoreResultCompetition
17 October 2000Estádio da Luz, Lisbon, Portugal6 Portugal1–11–12002 FIFA World Cup qualification
228 March 2001Mini Estadi, Barcelona, Spain8 Andorra3–03–02002 FIFA World Cup qualification
36 June 2001A. Le Coq Arena, Tallinn, Estonia11 Estonia2–02–02002 FIFA World Cup qualification
41 June 2002Niigata Stadium, Niigata, Japan20 Cameroon1–11–12002 FIFA World Cup
527 May 2004Lansdowne Road, Dublin, Republic of Ireland40 Romania1–01–0Friendly

Honours

Ipswich Town

  • Football League First Division play-offs: 1999–2000

Individual

  • Ipswich Town Player of the Year: 1997–98, 2002–03
  • Ipswich Town Hall of Fame: Inducted 2014
  • Charlton Athletic Player of the Year: 2007–08

Media career

He was one of several players and managers (including Danny Mills and Paul Jewell) who acted as summarisers for BBC Radio Five Live during the 2006 World Cup. Holland has also appeared on the BBC television program A Question of Sport and the radio quiz Fighting Talk. Holland as a freelance pundit has appeared on nearly every media outlet covering football in the UK. He has been a pundit on ESPN & Sky Sports, appeared on BBC results service Final Score on the odd Saturday afternoon and appeared on ITV commentating on the UEFA Cup. He is also a presenter for the Eastern England edition of the BBC regional football show Late Kick Off.

He has also appeared on many radio shows, he usually appears on talkSPORT on kick off usually on Friday nights and also appearing on Matchday Live on Saturday afternoons whenever he is not on Final Score. Holland has also appeared frequently on Absolute Radio and BBC Radio 5 Live as a co-commentator as well asFinal Score, Premier Soccer Saturday or talkSPORT. In addition Holland previously appeared as an analyst for Setanta Sports' live matches.

He also co-commentates on BT Sport on the UEFA Champions League and UEFA Europa League.

Holland began work with RTÉ when he commentated alongside George Hamilton during the Rep. of Ireland and Brazil friendly. He then appeared as a member of the panel on RTÉ's Premier Soccer Saturday for a number of weeks. He commentated the 2010 FIFA World Cup.

Holland lives in Essex.

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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